Despite controversy, Gonzalez, Reds rally past Pirates

PITTSBURGH (Ticker) -- Controversial calls and wild plays all
over the field could not deter Alex Gonzalez and the Cincinnati
Reds.

Gonzalez scored the winning run from first on a bloop single by
Ken Griffey Jr. in the ninth inning as the Cincinnati Reds won a
wild and bizarre 5-4 contest against the Pittsburgh Pirates on
Thursday night.

Griffey and Brandon Phillips each had three hits for Cincinnati,
which salvaged a split of the four-game series. Phillips also
made a great throw from short right field to cut down the
potential tying run at home plate in the bottom half, preserving
the victory.

"I think this is the best (play) of my career," Phillips said.
"If you think about it, game on the line, making a good throw to
home plate. ... There's nothing sweeter to win the game. It
can't get better than that obviously."

"That was a great way to win a game," Reds interim manager Pete
Mackanin said. "A tough way to lose one, too."

The Reds, who won for the eighth time in their past 10 games,
had two runs taken away on an odd and rare appeal call earlier
in the contest, but had any controversy rendered moot when they
rallied.

With two outs in the ninth inning and the scored tied at 4-4,
Gonzalez, who had just reached base on a single, scored when
Griffey sliced a pop down the left field line off of Matt Capps
(4-6). With shortstop Cesar Izturis, third baseman Jose
Bautista and left fielder Jason Bay converging, the ball dropped
between Izturis and Bautista.

Gonzalez, running on the pitch, came all the way around to just
beat a tag by catcher Ronny Paulino to make it 5-4.

Jared Burton (4-1), the fourth of Cincinnati's five pitchers,
earned the win by hurling 1 1/3 innings of relief.

Closer David Weathers struggled before nailing down his 29th
save. He retired the first two batters in the bottom of the
ninth before Josh Phelps, pinch hitting for Capps, doubled into
left-center field. Nate McLouth then hit a short pop over the
right side of the infield that fell into play.

However Phillips, hustling trying to make the catch, got to the
ball, spun and made a strong-armed throw on a line to catcher
Javier Valentin, who applied the tag to a sliding Phelps to end
the game as Phelps was trying to dislodge the ball.

"I saw the ball bounce and Brandon pick it up," Weathers said.
"I looked over and saw (Pirates third base coach Jeff Cox)
waving Phelps, and I'm like, 'A decent throw, he's out.' He was
barely rounding third when Brandon had the ball and made a
great throw. ... I've been in the minors and major leagues, and
I lost a bunch of games on those balls right there, but I've
never been saved by one."

"It was an amazing way to end a game like that," Valentin said.
"Real amazing."

Bautista's two-run homer in the seventh had given the Pirates a
4-3 lead, but Cincinnati tied it in the eighth on an Edwin
Encarnacion double that drove in Valentin.

The Pirates have lost two in a row after a stretch in which they
had won six of seven.

"This was the best and the most exciting game of the year,"
Pirates manager Jim Tracy said. "The way the game ended, I don't
know if you'll ever see that play get made like that again."

After Pittsburgh scored the game's first run when Adam LaRoche
singled in Freddy Sanchez in the bottom of the first, the Reds
took a 2-1 lead in the fourth - or so they thought. Ultimately,
even though both runs were on the scoreboard, neither would
count.

With the bases loaded and two outs, Encarnacion singled to left.
Griffey, who was on third, crossed home easily before Adam Dunn
beat the throw in from left fielder Bay as well.

But after play had settled, Pirates starter Matt Morris appealed
to third base umpire Chris Guccione that Dunn did not touch
third. Morris threw to third baseman Bautista, who stepped on
third and Guccione ruled Dunn out.

Initially, the scoreboard showed that was the third out of the
inning and the Reds had merely tied the game.

However, between innings, Mackanin came out to discuss the play
with crew chief Wally Bell. Bell informed Mackanin that neither
run would count because the play at third was a force play,
negating Griffey's run as well.

"I had thought since there was an intervening play before the
appeal, a run had scored," Mackanin said. "(Bell) said no,
because it was a force out, it didn't apply. That hurt, but the
guys battled back."

"To get some runs taken off the board, that's a rare occasion,"
Morris said. "That helped us tremendously."

After Sanchez doubled in McLouth with two outs in the fifth to
extend the Pirates' lead to 2-0, the Reds got their first runs -
and they counted this time - in the sixth.

Griffey scored when Valentin grounded into a double play with
the bases loaded and nobody out. Phillips, who was on third
after the double play, scored on a wild pitch to knot the game
at 2-2.

Later in the inning, pinch hitter Jorge Cantu gave the Reds the
lead when he drove in Scott Hatteberg with a single to right.

That ended the night for Morris. In his sixth start with the
Pirates since being acquired from San Francisco on July 31, the
10-year veteran was charged with three runs on nine hits and
three walks in 5 2/3 innings, striking out four.

Reds starter Matt Belisle, who entered the game 3-0 this season
against the Pirates, allowed two runs on seven hits with four
strikeouts in five innings.